Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Trump keeps rollback on the table

President pushing for new vote on Obamacare repeal

- By Noam N. Levey Washington Bureau Staff writer Lisa Mascaro contribute­d. noam.levey@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — Approachin­g the 100-day mark in office without action on the Affordable Care Act, President Donald Trump is pushing again for a vote on the sweeping House bill to roll back the 2010 law.

But even as House Republican­s and administra­tion officials continue to discuss potential changes to the legislatio­n, there is little evidence GOP leaders are close to getting the votes needed to get the bill out of the House.

As of Thursday afternoon, no new vote had been scheduled by House Republican leaders. “The question is whether it can get 216 votes in the House, and the answer isn’t clear at this time,” said a senior GOP aide, who asked not to be identified discussing internal party discussion­s.

Trump, speaking at a White House news conference, also did not commit to seeking a vote next week, saying he hoped the bill could come back for a vote soon. “The plan gets better and better and better, and it has gotten really, really good,” he said.

More immediatel­y, the White House faces a potential government shutdown unless lawmakers can agree on a new spending measure by the end of next week. Further complicati­ng that are demands from insurers and patient advocates that the Trump administra­tion commit to continuing to provide additional financial aid to low-income Americans who buy health coverage through Obamacare marketplac­es.

Many lawmakers would like the aid to be included in the new spending bill, but Trump has suggested that he might oppose that to force Democrats to accept other changes to the health bill.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., was forced to cancel a planned vote on the GOP repeal bill last month after it became clear that too many rank-and-file Republican­s opposed the legislatio­n.

Since then, several lawmakers have been working to amend the controvers­ial legislatio­n to win support from holdouts in the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus and from more centrist lawmakers, many of whom were loath to support legislatio­n that would leave millions more Americans without health insurance.

The original bill, called the American Health Care Act, would have resulted in 24 million fewer Americans with health coverage over the next decade, according to an analysis by the Congressio­nal Budget Office.

And while health insurance premiums would have been lower for some consumers, many older and lower-income Americans would have been priced out of coverage by the GOP plan.

The House legislatio­n would dismantle the Obamacare extensive system for expanding health insurance coverage to millions of Americans, cutting nearly a $1 trillion in federal aid that has allowed states to expand the Medicaid safety net programs and scaling back tax subsidies that help millions of low- and middleinco­me Americans buy commercial health plans.

At the same time, the House bill would repeal major taxes that the current law imposed to fund the expansion of health coverage. The House bill also scraps the unpopular requiremen­t in the current law that Americans have insurance or pay a penalty.

Despite rolling back key pillars of Obamacare, the House bill still generated fierce resistance from many conservati­ve lawmakers, who said it did not go far enough.

But an increasing number of GOP lawmakers have been voicing new concerns amid a widespread public backlash against the House legislatio­n. On Monday, Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Calif., announced that he would not support his party’s health care legislatio­n unless it left significan­t parts of Obamacare intact.

The changes to the House Republican bill now under discussion — first reported by the Huffington Post — would further weaken several key consumer protection­s in the current law, including the guarantee that Americans could get coverage even if they are sick.

Republican lawmakers have been exploring ways to give states the flexibilit­y to scrap these protection­s. States could, for example, once again allow insurers to charge sick consumers more than healthy ones and could lift requiremen­ts that all health plans cover a basic set of benefits, such as mental health and maternity care.

Rep. Tom MacArthur, RN.J., a centrist who has been working on the new language, said in a Facebook post that sick patients would still be able to get coverage because states would be required to offer a special health plan, known as a high-risk pool, for people unable to get other coverage.

“This amendment will make coverage of pre-existing conditions sacrosanct for all Americans,” he said.

The new GOP proposals drew swift criticism from many patient advocates and others.

“This latest attempt to repeal the ACA is full of broken promises and deceptive rhetoric,” said Debra Ness, president of the National Partnershi­p for Women & Families.

“While President Trump and leaders in Congress promised to protect health coverage for those with pre-existing conditions, this new plan undermines this critically important and wildly popular ACA provision.”

 ?? SHAWN THEW/EPA ?? President Donald Trump appears to be receiving scant Republican support on getting the health bill out of the House.
SHAWN THEW/EPA President Donald Trump appears to be receiving scant Republican support on getting the health bill out of the House.

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